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From VOA Learning English, |
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this is the Education Report. |
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Malala Yousafzai spoke to hundreds of young people |
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at the United Nations On Jule 12. |
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It was her first public speech since last October |
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when the schoolgirl was shot in the head |
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by Taliban gunmen in Pakistan. |
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The U.N. speech continued her campaign to educate children. |
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"The terrorists thought they would change my aims |
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and stop my ambitions, |
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but nothing changed in my life except this: |
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weakness, fear and hopelessness died. |
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Strength, power and courage was born." |
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On the day she spoke, |
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two groups announced that 57 million children |
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around the world are not going to school. |
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The two are "Save the Children" and UNESCO |
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- The United Nations Educational Scientific |
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and Cultural Organization. |
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A little more than half of those |
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who are not going to school are girls. |
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In September of 2012, |
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U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced a program |
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to get every boy and girl into school by 2015. |
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Malala Yousafzai believes the goal is possible. |
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"Let's pick up our books and our pens, |
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they are our most powerful weapons. |
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One child, one teacher, one book |
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and one pen can change the world." |
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Shiza Shahid is the executive director of |
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a new program called the Malala Fund. |
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She says the 16-year-old is a true spokes person |
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and worrier for girls rights. |
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The Malala Fund was created to support the voices |
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calling for girls' education. |
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The actress Angelina Jolie has donated $250,000 to the fund. |
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A group called Women in the World donated $150,000. |
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The first children served by the fund are 40 girls |
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in Malala's hometown in the Swat Valley in Pakistan. |
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These girls aged 5 to 12 had been working. |
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Shiza Shahid says the girls have stoped working |
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and are going to school. |
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Malala Yousafzai is now going to school in England, |
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but she talks to the girls in Swat Valley |
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by the computer software program Skype. |
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Shiza Shahid is also from Pakistan. |
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She says the organizers of the Malala Fund are deciding |
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what steps they can take to really change a girls' life. |
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She says girls everywhere can help. |
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Girls are also urged to tell their own stories online |
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at malalafund.org. |
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And that's the Education Report from Learning English, |
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I'm Karen Leggett. |